Grifin automatically invests in publicly traded companies every time a user buys their products – turning daily spending into a passive equity position.
ENTRY ANGLES
Automatically allocate user spending toward loans to local businesses with fundraising requests · Apply spend-based investment mechanic to independent content creators users consume · Apply spend-based investment mechanic to small app developers whose tools users regularly use
VERTICALS
CAPABILITIES
Spend tracking and automated allocation system, Platform for local businesses to list fundraising requests, Lending/investment infrastructure with regulatory compliance
GRIFIN FOUNDER
“turn spending into investing.”
Grifin promises to let users "turn spending into investing."
That's not quite literal. What actually happens: the app helps users invest in the publicly traded companies whose products and services they buy.
In practice: every time a user makes a purchase at a public company, they automatically put $1 toward buying that company's stock.
Grifin has even trademarked the methodology as "Adaptive Investing."
To activate it, a user downloads the Grifin app and links a bank card. The app monitors purchases at public companies through that card and charges the stock-buying amounts from it.
Actual stock purchases happen weekly – but only after the user reviews and approves the queue of purchase orders that accumulated during the week.
The process is configurable. The default per-purchase investment amount can be adjusted anywhere from $1 to $99. Users can block specific companies to prevent automatic orders from being created for them. And the whole mechanism can be paused and resumed at will.
Grifin officially launched on February 22, though the team spent a couple of years developing it and raised $11M along the way.
Grifin's website frames the methodology as "investing in motion" – your life continues as normal, and your investments adapt to how you actually live. It's an appealing idea, but a few important details are either undisclosed or not yet built into the app.
Portfolio rebalancing is one notable gap.
Rebalancing means periodically reviewing an investment portfolio – selling some holdings, buying others – to keep the allocation proportional to your current conviction in each position. If your confidence in a company fades, you trim; if it grows, you add. A well-designed Grifin should eventually do this too. In its framework, that might mean the app periodically prompting users to sell shares in companies whose products they've stopped buying or started buying less frequently.
A related gap is the relationship between investment size and purchase size.
If someone buys a $10 coffee at Starbucks every weekday and a $100 family pizza from Domino's once a week, the default rule produces $5/week in Starbucks stock and $1 in Domino's – even though the user's actual spending signals much stronger support for Domino's. The investment amounts don't reflect the magnitude of the spending decision.
What Grifin is ultimately trying to build is a personal index fund. An index fund doesn't buy and sell based on a manager's instincts – it follows predetermined rules driven by measurable data. The best-known index is the S&P 500, whose funds always hold shares in the 500 highest-market-cap public companies, with portfolio weights proportional to their relative valuations, maintained through regular rebalancing.
For Grifin, the index is the user's own consumer behavior. In theory, a Grifin user's portfolio at any given moment should reflect a basket of companies whose products they actually buy – ideally weighted by spending, not just by purchase frequency.
And there's an interesting possible extension: Grifin could aggregate all its users' individual portfolios into a single macro-level index – one that reflects actual consumer purchasing behavior rather than the actions of financial market participants. That could be a genuinely novel and valuable signal. The companies people consistently choose to spend money on tend to be the ones that survive and grow.
Grifin is building the connection from consumers to shareholders – making active buyers into equity holders. But a parallel movement is emerging in the other direction: making shareholders into active buyers.
Stakeholder Labs, [covered here](/review/zamahnis-na-bolshee) last year, is developing Roundtable, a product that lets public companies incentivize their retail investors to buy their products and services – through discounts and rewards. The product hasn't launched yet, but the startup has raised $4.2M.
Tiicker, [reviewed previously](/review/ispolzuj-lojalnost-po-polnoj) last spring, implements a similar mechanic and has raised $10.35M.
When mapping Grifin's methodology onto real spending habits, a limitation becomes obvious: most daily purchases happen at local cafés, independent restaurants, and neighborhood shops that aren't publicly traded. These are businesses people trust – and would happily invest in if given the option.
That calls to mind SMBX, [covered here](/review/kredit-doverija) back in 2021. Their platform lets local businesses raise financing from their own customers – people who believe in what the business is doing and want to back it with their dollars, earning up to 9% annual returns. SMBX raised $15.2M.
The same Grifin mechanic could be applied here: automatically allocating small amounts of a user's spending toward loans to local businesses that have listed fundraising requests on the platform. Extend the logic further, and the same principle could apply to independent content creators a user reads, or to small app developers whose tools they use regularly.
The key design principle: remove all subjective judgment and rely entirely on the "index" rule. If someone uses it and pays for it – it's worth lending to or investing in, proportional to usage level. Nothing else.
The opportunity worth pursuing: platforms that let consumers automatically lend to or invest in businesses based on their own purchasing and usage behavior.
The implementation details would get complicated quickly – but the underlying idea has an internal logic that's at least as defensible as trusting expert forecasts or following trending picks.